On Tue, Feb 17, 2009 at 6:10 PM, Sai Pullabhotla
<[email protected]> wrote:
> Normally, most PCs have just one network card and one address (private
> network address). If the PC connects through a router (e.g. a PC at a work
> places or a PC in a home network), to a system outside of your internal
> network, the peer on the other end sees your router's external/public
> address (this is the static/dynamic address given by your Internet Service
> Provider). I'm not sure if it is same as "public IP of the client".

Effectively, before the packet moves out NAT or NAPT (static or
dynamic) is applied.
I think we are on same page, just words are different :-)

thanks

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